The White Peril 白禍

28 December 2007

Ring in the new!
The Nikkei has this wry little look at what the last day of work in 2007 was like in Kasumigaseki:

2007: a year in which issues from food frauds to the leakage of public pension records and corruption scandals revolving around the defense administration attracted attention. On 28 December, the last business day of the year, federal ministries and agencies in Kasumigaseki, Tokyo, and elsewhere welcomed the end of a year spent frantically dealing with all kinds of problems and moving offices. While an air of relief at long last has spread over the place, workers with harried expressions could be overheard muttering, "Let's hope next year, at least, is quiet."

There's the Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry, and Fisheries, shaken by the need to respond to revelation after revelation of fraudulent food packaging and with its minister's suicide and the subsequent dramatic changing of the guard.


Of course, there are plenty more scandals to incorporate into our splashy year-in-review segments: the court battle over damages for hepatitis C infectees (initiated by the old ones, not the most recent ones...or the old ones we're just recently finding out about, of course--keep them straight!) possibly most prominent among them. But there's also the latest textbook scandal (over how to present the role of the Japanese armed forces in mass suicides among Okinawan civilians during the Battle of Okinawa). And, uh, Prime Minister Abe, you know, resigned.

And the Ministry of Defense still isn't sure how it's going to defend us against extraterrestrials.

Any surprise everyone's looking forward to next year? Can't hardly wait.
Posted by Sean on 2007-12-28 20:43:38 | 0 Comments | 0 Trackbacks >>>>>>> Categories: J-federal govt

20 December 2007

観光庁
That this announcement is not getting much attention is very suggestive:

At a 19 December meeting, Minister of Land, Infrastructure, and Transport Tetsuzo Fuyushiba and Minister of Interior Affairs Hiroya Masuda agreed to establish a new Tourism Agency in October 2008. The agency will be external to the MLIT. It will be geared toward attaining the goal of bringing the number of foreign travelers who visit Japan up to 10 million by 2010. This is the first new federal organization established at "agency" level since the Financial Services Agency in July 2000. Because the Marine Accident Inquiry Agency will be abolished, among other mergers and cuts in organizations, the total number of agencies in the government will not change.

...

The MLIT [justified] its budgetary application this way: "The establishment [of this new agency] will be indispensable in light of our goal of building Japan up as a tourist destination."


It's encouraging that the government is recognizing that Japan has been left (far) behind as the tourism sector has developed. A book could be written on how that happened--Alex Kerr has a whole chapter on it in Dogs and Demons. Japan has all the raw materials to be an industry powerhouse: an established global brand identity in both esoteric high culture and funky pop culture, a first-world standard of living, highly developed transportation infrastructure. It's expensive, but so are plenty of other favorite destinations for travelers. And for Americans and Europeans, it's certainly no harder to get to than Bali or Thailand.

And yet, there's plenty about the place that's forbidding and, I suspect, signals to people that it's not the place to come to relax. Japanese people are very helpful to tourists who stop and ask for directions on the street and such, but almost no one really speaks English, let alone French, German, Spanish, or Mandarin. That's true even in the big hotels and resorts. Friends of mine who work in hotel management can go on for hours about how difficult it is to get staff who can communicate effectively with guests and respond flexibly to their needs.

Speaking of being flexible, Japan famously isn't. That helps make the country safe and clean, but it can also make adventure difficult, even in interesting city neighborhoods. Establishments that don't want foreign customers tend to turn them curtly away at the door or, sometimes, allow them to enter and then just fail to serve them until they leave. (It wouldn't make the motivation any less obnoxious, but least a polite "I'm sorry, but we're just not set up to accommodate non-Japanese guests" would soften things a bit.) Resort design is intruded on by plasticky fixtures, and countryside views are intruded on by pylons and blocky buildings.

Enjoying Japan takes effort, and it leaves people a little worn out by the end of their stay. I have only fragmentary anecdotal evidence for this, but I suspect that when people go home from Japan and chat about it with their friends, what they convey is "Fascinating place! But being there felt so odd" rather than "Fascinating place! You really must go sometime!" People who come once don't have enough incentive to come back, and people who haven't been somehow always find reasons to visit other places first.

Of course, none of this matters intrinsically. Not being able to speak English is not a moral failing. The problem is that the noises the federal government is making indicate that Japan wants to get in on the lucrative tourism game, and I'm not sure that better ad campaigns in foreign countries address the real issues. But the move probably means more jobs for bureaucrats, which is always a good thing!
Posted by Sean on 2007-12-20 14:01:46 | 0 Comments | 0 Trackbacks >>>>>>> Categories: J-federal govt

19 December 2007

UFO
A few years ago, Claire Berlinski wrote the following about the intelligence failures that led up to 9/11:

Baer reports that high-ranking CIA officials privately tell reporters that "when the dust finally clears, Americans will see that September 11 was a triumph for the intelligence community, not a failure."

It is a challenge to imagine what the words "intelligence failure" might mean, if not an unexpected attack on American soil that leaves more than three thousand civilians dead. Perhaps these officials are keeping the term in reserve for an invasion by extraterrestrials.


Perhaps it was my lit. major's overactive imagination, but I took that as exaggeration for effect. I was wrong, though, it seems. One of the big stories in Japan yesterday--I still can't quite believe I'm actually typing this--was an exchange over whether Japan's security measures against illegal aliens includes the type that menaces Sigourney Weaver:

With Cabinet ministers debating all manner of security measures for unwanted visitors, be they terrorists or ballistic missiles, there was something that no one had apparently taken into consideration: Unidentified flying objects.

On Tuesday, the Cabinet made clear what it knows.

In an official written inquiry, Ryuji Yamane, an Upper House member from opposition Minshuto (Democratic Party of Japan), had requested an explanation of the government's stand on UFOs.

In response, the Cabinet endorsed a statement saying there had been no confirmed existence of UFOs from outer space.

...

Yamane noted that there have been numerous reports of UFO sightings and asked how the government goes about collecting information and studying UFOs, how it plans to deal with one landing in Japan, and whether Tokyo exchanges information on this issue with other nations.

The government's reply was that since it had not confirmed the existence of UFOs, it has not collected information on them, nor studied them.


Yamane's blogs, listed on his profile page, don't yet contain any mention of his important efforts to plug the chinks in national security. Chief Cabinet Minister Nobutaka Machimura was moved to announce at a press conference, "個人的には絶対いると思う。 (kojintekini ha zettai iru to omou: 'personally, I think [extraterrestrials] absolutely exist')" Glad to see members of the cabinet have a functioning sense of wonder.

However, if it's real-life threats we're worried about, the more gladdening news is probably that of the success of a test of one element of Japan's anti-missile defense system in Hawaii:

The Maritime Self-Defense Force's Aegis destroyer Kongo succeeded in intercepting a mock ballistic missile warhead with an SM-3 missile as part of missile defense system test carried out at sea near Hawaii, the MSDF announced Monday.

The success of the test--the first conducted by the MSDF--means Japan will be able to counter the threat of North Korea's ballistic missiles, such as the Rodong and Taepodong-1, analysts said.

...

Compared to a mock target based on a Scud-type missile, whose warhead and rocket engine do not separate, the target used in Monday's experiment flies much faster at about Mach 10 and is therefore more difficult to intercept.


The DPRK likes to test missiles every now and then, just to be neighborly. The import of this test will not be lost on Pyongyang.
Posted by Sean on 2007-12-19 21:07:47 | 0 Comments | 0 Trackbacks >>>>>>> Categories: J-defense

11 December 2007

恍惚の人
The Yomiuri has a lengthy article on an issue increasingly facing hospitals: elderly patients with no family who will take them when they're discharged after lengthy stays:

About a year ago, a man in his 60s who had been admitted as an inpatient to a university hospital in Tokyo, began behaving violently after he was given permission to leave hospital but was rejected by his family. Since then, he has continually caused trouble in the hospital and has often acted aggressively toward nurses.

According to the All Japan Hospital Association, many hospitals nationwide have similar troubles with long-term hospitalized patients with no place to go. Such patients tend to think they have been abandoned by their family as well as society and give in to despair, often causing problems for the hospital where they stay.

...

Support systems for hospitals are indeed insufficient. Municipal welfare offices, which deal with matters related to nursing care insurance, do have information about care facilities. "But due to poor coordination between hospitals and welfare offices, information related to the facilities that could accept patients hasn't been properly utilized," said Takao Ando, vice president of the association. Displaying a typical lack of such coordination, the Sakai hospital had never consulted with the municipal welfare office over the patient.

Officials of both the Tokyo metropolitan and Osaka prefectural governments said there were no systems specifically designed to find a place to stay for patients who do not have family or friends to take them in. The officials said the issue had been dealt with by each hospital individually.


Ads for assisted living facilities and for regular old condominium complexes for the elderly that just have health care providers on the premises have been frequent since I've lived in Japan. But as in the States, the nice ones cost a lot. A family of a few brothers and sisters who earn good money can, I've been told, manage without much difficulty if the parents' pensions are factored in. (Well, and if the younger children don't expect the eldest son to do his traditional duty and thus stick him with the whole bill.) But those without relatives or friends willing to look after them also tend to be in a poor position to do research about alternatives. As the article describes, many become mentally disturbed and start causing trouble for their caregivers.

BTW, the title of this post is the title of a novel, published in the early '70s after serialization, that was the first full-length book I was ever able to read entirely in Japanese. It's also been translated into English as The Twilight Years. It tells the story of a family that's successfully managed to blend tradition and modernity: Eldest son and his wife (the protagonist) have a house with a separate small cottage on the same property for his parents to live in; they're doing their filial duty while being able to have their own lives. When the mother-in-law dies and it becomes increasingly clear that the father-in-law is going senile and can't take care of himself anymore, the wife is forced to figure out how to handle it. Like a lot of serialized novels, it has its share of contrived cliffhangers, but the way it lays out the issues that face the family doesn't feel forced. Or dated, despite the social changes in the intervening three decades.
Posted by Sean on 2007-12-11 00:29:53 | 0 Comments | 0 Trackbacks >>>>>>> Categories: japan

9 December 2007

率先力
It's always comforting when people working for the public good exhibit resourcefulness.

Unless they're cheating. The Mainichi reports that a fireman in Aichi Prefecture, unsatisfied with the number of fires and attendant chances to demonstrate heroism, started lighting his own:

Since about November last year, Okazaki and neighboring Toyokawa have been the sites of around 40 forest fires all started under suspicious circumstances.

Umemura had been a member of his local fire brigade since April 2003. Of the roughly 40 fires believed to have resulted from arson, Umemura went out to fight the fire on 18 occasions.

Police said after Uemura set the fires using his cigarette and match contraption, he would return to his home then go back to the scene of the blaze and help put it out.

But police began to suspect something was amiss when Umemura kept finding the device that had caused the blazes and called him in for questioning, where he admitted to setting the fires.


The article in the Japanese edition further states that he wrote about the fires on his blog--not that he was a dummy and revealed his role in starting them, but that he described the occurrence of the fires and his participation in putting out and investigating them.

There's also this item in the Asahi, which begins, most comfortingly, as follows:

The recent case of university physicians cheating on their qualifications for certification exams was not an isolated incident.

Six physicians at Tokyo Medical University were also punished last year by a medical society for forging treatment papers needed to qualify for an internist certification exam, sources said Friday.

The revelation follows the case at Showa University's School of Medicine, in which five doctors were found to have padded treatment records to qualify for an internist certification exam.


The doctors in question padded their own treatment records with files on patients actually treated in a different department.
Posted by Sean on 2007-12-09 20:16:59 | 2 Comments | 0 Trackbacks >>>>>>> Categories: japan
誤射
A doctor who lives in Meguro Ward very close to where Atsushi and I used to live has several hunting rifles (which are tightly controlled but still legal in Japan). He came home around noon today with one and left it in the living room. [The Mainichi says he was cleaning them, not that he'd just brought one home. My mistake.--SRK] He also left his two little boys unsupervised. You can probably guess what's coming.

Dr. Tatematsu's younger son Naoki (2) was hit by a bullet in the lower abdomen and died approximately an hour after being transported to the hospital.

The Meguro Police Department is conducting a thorough investigation of the circumstances of the shooting but believes it is possible that the elder Tatematsu boy (5) was nearby and picked up the gun, accidentally pulling the trigger.


When my little brother and I played together, we probably spent a good 30% of the time pretending to shoot each other. To little boys, any object that's vaguely long and narrow becomes a gun--never mind the super-cool real thing. (Of course, in these cases, there's always an outside chance that the truth will turn out to be more sinister, but lax supervision is certainly a plausible, if sad, explanation.)
Posted by Sean on 2007-12-09 19:46:08 | 2 Comments | 0 Trackbacks >>>>>>> Categories: japan

6 December 2007

Dislocations
Friends who don't live here frequently ask me what it is about Western media reporting about Japan that drives me up the wall. I usually complain that journalists recycle the same scripts over and over, but that in and of itself isn't really it. Some things said repeatedly because they're actually happening repeatedly. But The New York Times business section featured an excellent example yesterday of things I sometimes find it hard to put my finger on: skating over the interesting issues a story raises in a way that means there's little new for people who know Japan and plenty that's potentially misleading for people who don't

Martin Fackler, who wrote the piece, doesn't make any factual errors that I can see. (Well, the first sentence should probably say, "remote northern coast of Japan's main island," since he's not talking about Hokkaido.) And he tries to give several points of view about a controversial phenomenon. The result is still unenlightening. I assume that one of his editors, not he himself, wrote the headline and subhead. Still, they do pretty aptly sum up the article, which presents a phenomenon with quite a long history with little context:

Japan's $4.7 trillion economy has expanded for the last five and a half years. Urban centers like Tokyo and Nagoya, the seat of the Japanese car industry, are thriving, as seen in the building boom decorating Tokyo's skyline with glittering new high-rises.

But in regions like Akita, the mountainous northern prefecture that is home to Noshiro, downtowns have emptied and factories have closed, and an exodus to Tokyo of youths seeking jobs has left behind towns that are predominantly for the elderly.

There is widespread concern here that these changes are turning Japan into a nation divided into winners and losers, split geographically between prosperous cities and the depressed rural areas. Many here attribute this growing disparity to Japan's embrace of American-style economic liberalization, begun in the 1990s to end the nation’s decade of stagnation.

The measures to open up markets helped revive cities like Tokyo and lowered prices for Japan's long-suffering urban middle class. But elsewhere in Japan, they are seen as bringing unwelcome and wrenching change.

...

For all of Japan, the question now is whether this sort of reaction will be strong enough to stop or reverse economic liberalization. The central government has already begun to tighten restrictions on large stores, and many in rural areas are calling for more public works.

But many in Tokyo and regions like Akita say Japan's soaring fiscal deficits make it impossible to return fully to the old ways, and many advocate opening markets further.


There's no indication in this flurry of "some say" explanations of whether any of them have, you know, more evidence than others. No one can gainsay the point that market liberalization has plenty of enemies in Japan. Whether--given the collapse of the Bubble produced by the "old ways," increased competition from China in the manufacturing and tech sectors, and Japan's dependency on export markets for its wealth--it has any viable alternative is another matter. Of course, Japan is not going to become Estonia. Japan will continue to make the trade-offs that suit its own culture, which does indeed include a tendency to distribute benefits through the group, even when the group is the entire population of the country.

But there are, in fact, trade-offs involved, and it's perilous not to recognize them. Fackler coolly reports that "many in rural areas are calling for more public works" without giving even the slightest hint of the degree to which the post-war "Got a problem? Get a cement mixer" approach to rural economies helped get them into their current pickle. During the era of economic hypergrowth, massive road-building, earthworks, and other construction projects gave people in rural areas something to do besides farming. Cruelly, it also deceived them into believing they were earning their money by producing value for the economy just like the major cities, and it diverted their energy away from building other skills and exploiting local assets. Now that the funding for boondoggles is harder to come by, keeping the egalitarian mask over productivity disparities is more difficult. Residents of rural areas have less income and purchasing power. Keeping out imports and big-box retailers may protect local businesses from "excessive competition," But there's a case to be made that it also "protects" cash-strapped consumers from goods they can more easily afford.

We hear little about their problems in Fackler's article, but to his credit he displays some awareness that the mom-and-pop retailers he's writing about are not limitlessly sympathetic characters: "In interviews, local business leaders bemoaned their declining fortunes, but also quickly dismissed suggestions that they seek new opportunities in nearby emerging markets like China or Russia, which sits just across the narrow Sea of Japan from Akita." Plenty of people in rural Japan were perfectly happy for Tokyo and other major commercial centers to do the hard work of wealth creation when painful adaptation to new economic realities was something expected only of foreign markets when Japan came up with innovations in metal, automotive, or electronics manufacture.

Fackler might have produced a genuinely illuminating piece if he'd explored in more detail the proposals for economic revitalization that forward-thinking locals are putting forth, exactly who's moving to scuttle them, and how they're defending their resistance. It's too bad that he or his editor decided that the boil-in-bag narrative of how the cities are wicking away young talent from rural areas and leaving them in the dust economically was all that needed serving up. His article ends just as it starts getting interesting.
Posted by Sean on 2007-12-06 22:02:30 | 0 Comments | 0 Trackbacks >>>>>>> Categories: japan